| Literature DB >> 29323113 |
Li Ding1, Yanying Wei1, Libo Li1, Tao Zhang1, Haihui Wang2, Jian Xue1,3, Liang-Xin Ding1, Suqing Wang1, Jürgen Caro3, Yury Gogotsi4,5.
Abstract
Molecular sieving membranes with sufficient and uniform nanochannels that break the permeability-selectivity trade-off are desirable for energy-efficient gas separation, and the arising two-dimensional (2D) materials provide new routes for membrane development. However, for 2D lamellar membranes, disordered interlayer nanochannels for mass transport are usually formed between randomly stacked neighboring nanosheets, which is obstructive for highly efficient separation. Therefore, manufacturing lamellar membranes with highly ordered nanochannel structures for fast and precise molecular sieving is still challenging. Here, we report on lamellar stacked MXene membranes with aligned and regular subnanometer channels, taking advantage of the abundant surface-terminating groups on the MXene nanosheets, which exhibit excellent gas separation performance with H2 permeability >2200 Barrer and H2/CO2 selectivity >160, superior to the state-of-the-art membranes. The results of molecular dynamics simulations quantitatively support the experiments, confirming the subnanometer interlayer spacing between the neighboring MXene nanosheets as molecular sieving channels for gas separation.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29323113 PMCID: PMC5765169 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-02529-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Morphology and structure of exfoliated MXene (Ti3C2TX) nanosheets and stacked MXene membrane. a SEM image of the delaminated MXene nanosheets on porous anodic aluminum oxide (AAO) (scale bar, 1 μm). Inset is the Tyndall scattering effect in MXene colloidal solution in water. b HRTEM image of the MXene nanosheet with SAED pattern in the inset (scale bar, 5 nm, inset b, 5 nm−1). c AFM image of the MXene nanosheet on cleaved mica. The height profile of the nanosheet corresponds to the blue dashed line (scale bar, 500 nm). Note that the adsorbed molecules, such as H2O, also contribute the detected thickness of 1.5 nm. d SEM image of the MXene membrane surface (scale bar, 500 nm). Inset is a photograph of a MXene membrane. e Cross-sectional SEM image of the MXene membrane (scale bar, 1 μm). Inset is a tweezer bent membrane. f Cross-sectional TEM image of the MXene membrane with 2D channels (scale bar, 10 nm). g XRD patterns of the MAX (Ti3AlC2) powder and MXene (Ti3C2TX) membrane with inset of the magnified XRD pattern at low Bragg angles. h Illustration of the spacing between the neighboring MXene nanosheets in the membrane
Fig. 2MD simulations of the gas permeation through the MXene membrane compared with the experimental results. a Single-gas permeabilities through a 2-μm-thick MXene membrane as a function of the gas kinetic diameter at 25 °C and 1 bar. Inset shows the selectivity of H2 relative to the other gases in both the single-gas and equimolar mixed-gas permeation studies. b Comparison of the experimental and MD simulated selectivities of H2/CO2 and H2/N2 in both the single-gas and mixed-gas permeations. c The number of gas molecules that passed through the MXene membrane in MD simulation as a function of simulation time for single-gas permeation. For H2, only the first 10 ns of the simulation are shown because of its fast permeation. By contrast, only two molecules pass through the MXene membrane during the 200-ns-long simulation for CO2 or N2. The CO2 curve fluctuates because of CO2 adsorption–desorption on the MXene membrane. d Simulation snapshots at 0, 30, 100, and 300 ns for two sets of mixed-gas permeation systems: (H2 + CO2) and (H2 + N2). Note that H2 was modeled by united-atom force field. The MXene membrane was composed of two nanosheets with a free spacing of 0.35 nm located in the middle of the simulation system. In the beginning (t = 0 ns), 30 H2 and 30 CO2 (or N2) molecules were present in the feed chamber, which permeated through the MXene membrane to the evacuated permeate chamber. The details can be found in section of “Methods”
Fig. 3Gas separation performance of the MXene membrane. a Single-gas permeabilities through the MXene membranes with different thicknesses at 25 °C and 1 bar. b H2/CO2 separation performance of a 2-μm-thick MXene membrane as a function of temperature in the equimolar mixed-gas permeation. c Long-term separation of equimolar H2/CO2 mixture through a 2-μm-thick MXene membrane at 25 °C and 1 bar. d H2/CO2 separation performance of the MXene membrane compared with state-of-the-art gas separation membranes. The black line indicates the Robeson 2008 upper bound of polymeric membranes for H2/CO2 separation[58], and the orange dashed line represents the 2017 upper bound of the best current membranes for H2/CO2 separation. Information on the data points is given in Supplementary Table 9